Apple Intelligence needed a Chinese partner and has already found it, according to ‘The Information’. The key is qwen

Apple needs a local partner to offer Apple Intelligence in China, where regulations demand that AI services pass through national companies. We knew that Apple had been looking for the ideal partner for some time, according to The Informationhe has found it in Alibaba. Why is it important. The absence of Apple Intelligence in China has weighed iPhone sales in the largest smartphones market in the world. The agreement could reverse this trend just when Apple plans to launch its AI in simplified Chinese in April, the same month in which It will arrive in Spanish. In Xataka Apple’s metamorphosis: from the minimalist catalog to calculated maximalism What has happened. Apple and Alibaba have jointly presented their AI functions for approval by the Chinese regulator. The alliance comes after Apple will rule out collaborating with Baidu for not reaching the required standards. Between bambalins. Apple was also probing possible alliances with Bytedance, Tencent and Deepseek Before opting for Alibaba. The choice was based on the robustness of the model Qwen from Alibaba and its ability to process personalized data thanks to its experience in electronic commerce. Also, Ahem, in Your alignment with socialist values required by the Beijing government. The latest. Alibaba’s actions They have triggered 3.5% After the publication of the news and accumulates 8% in two days. The market trusts the fruit of this operation between both companies. Alibaba’s Qwen model has gained reputation in recent months. Its potential was demonstrated when Stanford scientists managed to train a new reasoning model for less than $ 50 using Qwen as a base. S1 marked a before and after for the model. Outstanding image | Xataka with Midjourney In Xataka | Choose between security and survival: the dilemma that terrifies the CEO of Anthropic in the US and China AI war

Mark Zuckerberg has threatened to say goodbye to those who filter the information of their meetings: we know it for a filtration

Information leaks They represent a serious problem For large corporations since it provides relevant information on their strategy, allowing them to react in advance. In the finish line, the leaks of comments of his CEO in the personnel meetings have been a problem, and that is reported by Mark Zuckerberg to his workers. Of course, everything Zuckerberg said at that meeting, also He immediately leaked. Filtered statements Last week, Mark Zuckerberg brought together employees from their headquarters to answer some of their questions, assuring them that 2025 was going to be a very year very intense goalso he recommended to his employees “open the belts.” In Xataka Mark Zuckerberg begins a new “purge” in finish. It will fire thousands of employees for low performance, according to Bloomberg However, such and as they pointed out from The Vergesomething had changed in the dynamics of these staff meetings. Mark Zuckerberg and the company’s managers would not answer compromising questions or the most voted, as they used to do. “We will jump the questions that we believe could be unproductive if they are filtered,” Zuckerberg said. The Meta CEO explained that, every time he made a comment at those meetings, his statements They appeared immediately published in the press As if he had made them directly to your microphones. “We try to be very open and then everything I say filters. It is shit,” the millionaire lamented. Ironically, these statements by Mark Zuckerberg also leaked immediately. OBJECTIVE: Hunt to the mole The Meta Security Department has seriously proposed with these internal leaks and, in a circular that – yes, It has leaked– He sent the staff, announced that target will fire information filters If they were identified. “We take the leaks very seriously and we will take measures,” said Guy Rosen, director of Meta Information Security in the filtered memorandum. {“videoid”: “x99YHC8”, “Autoplay”: fals, “Title”: “Conversation with goal Ai using the voice in WhatsApp”, “Tag”: “Webedia-Prod”, “Duration”: “93”} “When information is stolen or filtered, there are repercussions that go beyond the immediate impact on security. Our equipment demoralizes and we all lose time that it would be better to use to work on our products and in the achievement of our goals and our mission” , Rosen explained. The document indicates that some employees have already been dismissed for “exfracting confidential documents”, although there are no details of the positions occupied by those employees. The increase in finishing filtrations seems to be the response of employees to Change of the companyafter the recent links of Mark Zuckerberg with Donald Trump. These links seem to go more, since even Mark Zuckerberg would be planning to leave Silicon Valley to move near the power circles in Washington, according to The published by Fortune. In Xataka | The next border of the super farms is no longer to be Milmillonarios, is to be Billionaires: Musk, Zuckerberg and Bezos are candidates Image | Flickr (aNthony Quintano) (Function () {Window._js_modules = Window._js_modules || ; – The news Mark Zuckerberg has threatened to say goodbye to those who filter the information of their meetings: we know it for a filtration It was originally posted in Xataka by Rubén Andrés .

In ‘Farmtok’, agriculture takes the spotlight. What will happen if TikTok disappears?

BUCYRUS, Ohio, USA — Zoe Kent hopes people will lighten up a little to hear her talk about farming on the internet. In one of his latest videos, he compares pesticide application to dry shampoo. “Farming is for girls,” he jokes. On Instagram and TikTok, under the username “farmwithzoe,” Kent films herself putting on boots to load corn into the bed of a huge truck, posts memes about the price of grain, and documents almost everything about life on the farm, from how He gets rocks stuck in his equipment until he eats lunch on long days working on a combine. Now, the future of TikTok — and “Farmtok,” as some creators call the agriculture-related influencer ecosystem — has become more uncertain due to a ban the U.S. government briefly implemented on TikTok over the weekend. The new Trump administration rescinded that ban, at least for now, but farmers are keenly aware that things could change, and with them, the ways they share farm life with the rest of the world. But most say they will continue to adapt to what the platforms throw at them. “It’s like building your business on rented land,” Kent said. “It’s not guaranteed to stay there.” Even before the uncertain threat to TikTok’s future, agricultural creators had to deal with the evolution of social media. As algorithms changed, they faced greater challenges communicating with an audience many see as increasingly disconnected from agriculture. But most say they will continue to adapt to what the platforms throw at them. Some producers make extra money by building an audience on TikTok or Instagram. Others use social media to advertise to local customers, such as restaurants or farmers markets. Perhaps most importantly, they want to continue building community with other farmers in the face of industry challenges such as the profession’s impact on mental health, economic pressure and climate change. Several farmers said the disconnect has grown over the years as social media algorithms have changed. “I know for a fact that our social media reach is way down now,” said Beth Satterwhite, who has been posting on Instagram about her small organic vegetable farm in McMinnville, Oregon, for more than a decade. “The stories of people working in agriculture are a little less interesting for the consumer, I don’t know if it’s really less interesting or just less visible,” he said. Neil Denton, who grows corn, soybeans, wheat and rye in Barlow, Kentucky, shared a similar sentiment. Consider that many of his more than 80,000 followers on Instagram and 33,000 on TikTok are other producers, not members of the public. He finds that “disappointing” and worries about how much people know about the food that ends up on their plates. But he thinks there’s a silver lining: “Farming is a lonely occupation because you’re not around a lot of co-workers,” Denton said. “I think some farmers use social media as an outlet… to be able to express yourself and feel like you’re not alone.” Within the farming community, it can also be helpful to learn from other farmers, many producers said. Megan Dwyer, who grows corn and soybeans and raises beef cattle in northwest Illinois, uses social media, especially X and Facebook, to gauge what’s important to other farmers. “It’s a great source of information, especially quick information,” he said. However, all that quick information comes at a price. Satterwhite described a “soup of language” around agriculture, saying it could be difficult for an outsider to say which agricultural practices are legitimately better for the climate or the environment. “I see a lot of greenwashing,” Satterwhite said, referring to the practice of falsely portraying a product or practice as green in order to market it to an environmentally conscious public. “There is definitely a lot of misinformation out there,” Kent added. “I try to filter out who has genuine questions versus who already has a stance and isn’t willing to listen to me.” That’s something many ag influencers agree on: that they still want a place to have a conversation. As Dwyer said, “You never know who you are influencing there or what can happen.”

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